Korean Import Steals The Show
From second choice to first class, Queensland Roar's Korean recruit
Seo Hyuk-Su is rapidly rivalling Dwight Yorke for the title of most
valuable A-League import. Marc Fox reports.
Earlier this year, when Queensland coach Miron Bleiberg was assembling
his first-ever A-League squad ahead of the competition's August
start, he invited Korean World Cup veteran Shin Tae-Yong to tropical
Australia for a trial. When 35-year old Shin arrived, however, he
wasn't alone.
Seongnam Ilhwa team-mate Seo Hyuk-Su had accompanied his senior
colleague on the trip and was duly given the chance to impress Bleiberg
on the pitch. With seemingly immeasurable stamina and astute positioning,
Seo made an instant impact. The Roar snapped him up.
Six months later, clinching the 32-year-old's signature still stands
as the best piece of business Queensland carried out during pre-season.
Although the least garnered of the five Asian imports in the new
league when he arrived, Seo has quickly established himself as the
archetypal Most Valuable Player. Not only has the likeable midfielder
stepped out of the shadows of Shin at his club, he has become the
number one Asian import in the whole league - and is closing in
on Dwight Yorke's untouchable status
as most heralded overseas recruit.
Even though his playing resume from his days in Korea - seven seasons
in the K-League following a lengthy spell in Korea's second tier
- might not have suggested so, Seo has dwarfed the achievements
of his continental counterparts during the new competition's opening
exchanges.
The form of Adelaide United's Chinese marquee signing Qu Shengqing
has been interrupted with niggling injuries and is only threatening
to take off two months in. Meanwhile Qu's countryman at the New
Zealand Knights, Xiaobin Zhang, has been in and out of the side
currently languishing at the root of the table and Japan-born
players Hiro Ishida (Perth Glory) and Naoki Imaya (NZ Knights) are
only now flourishing after injury setbacks.
In contract, Seo has been an A-League ever-present for Bleiberg.
In fact, nobody can remember the last time the star nicknamed Harold
by his constantly ribbing colleagues didn’t start a match
for the Roar.
And his influence is forever growing. Although arriving down under
as a self-professed full-back, Seo has been converted into the league's
most adept holding midfielder. The position is pivotal in Bleiberg's
attack-minded 4-3-3 formation within which the Korean's midfield
allies are encouraged to get forward and support the strikers as
much as possible. Seo reads the game so well, the coach often relies
on him to cover for marauding sweeper Chad Gibson when the captain
strides forward.
He is a sweet passer, a tigerish tackler and packs a punch when
shooting too. Seo has scored in each of his last two A-League outings,
both strikes blockbusters from metres outside the box - one with
the left, one with the right. Furthermore, a rare mistake to allow
Sydney FC's opening goal in the defeat to the pre-season favourites
hasn’t affected his cult hero status with home fans one bit.
After gradually adjusting to Western culture (his favourite foods
are lasagne and Domino's pizza), Seo and his family are keen to
remain in Australia. So with only six months of his contract remaining,
Bleiberg had better act soon.
Road to 2006 Update: It's Uruguay!
After a tense final round of qualifying in the South
American section, the game between Uruguay and Argentina - a
match possibly as many people were watching in Australia as locally
- decided the Socceroos' opponents for next month's World Cup playoff.
Uruguay headed into the ultimate round knowing a victory would
assure them of snatching fifth-place and the right to meet Australia
in the CONMEBOL / Oceania playoff for the 32nd World Cup berth.
A draw would have even been enough had closest rivals Colombia only
managed the same result in Paraguay.
However, with the Colombians taking an early lead in Asuncion through
striker Luis Rey, tension in Montevideo mounted. Only in the second
half did Uruguay look like taking the lead with slick combination
play between Diego Forlan and Alvaro Recoba breaking the deadlock.
In truth, the Uruguayan margin of victory might have been greater
by the final whistle but nevertheless fifth position was theirs.
The fixture might be a repeat of the 2001 playoff which Uruguay
won 3-1 on aggregate but the South Americans know there will be
no walkover this time. With admired tactician Guus Hiddink at the
helm, Australia's preparation will be well researched and schooled
in know-how. Hiddink's preferred 3-4-3 system offers better defensive
protection than recent regimes while still not isolating hot-and-cold
striker Mark Viduka.
Their form is impressive too. The Socceroos overpowered Jamaica
in London last weekend in the most cutthroat display commentators
had seen for a number of years. Confidence is high here but expectation
is too. Next month is shaping up as the biggest in recent memory
for Australia's footballing community.
Australian A-League Factfile
A-League Clubs |
| Adelaide United |
| Central Coast
Mariners |
| Melbourne Victory |
| Newcastle United
Jets |
| Perth Glory |
| Queensland Roar |
| Sydney FC |
| Wellington Phoenix
|
- The teams are based in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Newcastle,
Brisbane, Gosford and Wellington, New Zealand
- A squad no greater than 23 players is allowed
- A minimum of three players must be under 20 years of age
- As with most Australian sports, a salary cap has been imposed: AUD$1.7m per annum
- One designated 'marquee' player can be paid outside this cap
- Top four sides at the season's end will play-off to decide
the eventual champions
A-League Teams' Official Sites Adelaide United: www.adelaideunited.com.au
Central Coast Mariners: www.ccmariners.com.au
Melbourne Victory: www.mvfc.com.au
Newcastle United Jets: www.newcastlejets.com.au
Perth Glory: www.perthglory.com.au
Queensland Roar: www.qldroar.com.au
Sydney FC: www.sydneyfc.com
Wellington Phoenix: www.wellingtonphoenix.com
Forums & Message Boards
Central Coast Mariners ccmfc.proboards25.com
Queensland Roar www.qldroarforums.com
Sydney FC www.sydneyfc-unofficial.com
To add your Australian soccer link to this list please contact
us
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